Afghan head seeks halt to vote recount

Source:AFP Published: 2019/11/10 22:08:40

Afghan presidential candidate Abdullah Abdullah casts his vote at a polling station in Kabul, Afghanistan on September 28, 2019. Photo: VCG

 

Afghanistan's Chief Executive Abdullah Abdullah on Sunday called for a halt to a recount of the recent presidential election, saying he would not accept "fraud-marked" results.

The move adds a fresh layer of uncertainty following the September 28 poll, which already has been marred by record-low turnout and continued bickering between Abdullah and his rival, President Ashraf Ghani.

"The recounting should be stopped. We are trying to save the process from fraudsters," Abdullah said at a rally of his supporters in Kabul. 

"A fraud-marred election will not be accepted. The result should be based on the clean votes of our people." 

Abdullah, who unsuccessfully ran in the previous two presidential elections and is fighting for his political future, has repeatedly raised questions about the validity of hundreds of thousands of votes.

The election was meant to be the cleanest yet in Afghanistan's young democracy, with a German firm supplying biometric machines that were supposed to stop people from voting more than once. But nearly 1 million of the initial votes were purged owing to irregularities, meaning the election saw by far the lowest turnout of any Afghan poll, with only about 1.8 million votes from a total of 9.6 million registered voters in a population of around 37 million people.

Abdullah has said problems remain with about 300,000 of these high-tech votes, claiming various issues including that photos attached to some ballots had been taken from fake identity cards, and not actual voters.



Posted in: MID-EAST

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